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    Thursday, March 12, 2020

    "Magic: the Gathering" is as Hard as Arithmetic. "In this paper we show that the ``mate-in-$n$'' problem for Magic is $\Delta^0_n$-hard and that optimal play in two-player Magic is non-arithmetic in general." [abstract + link to PDF] Computer Science

    "Magic: the Gathering" is as Hard as Arithmetic. "In this paper we show that the ``mate-in-$n$'' problem for Magic is $\Delta^0_n$-hard and that optimal play in two-player Magic is non-arithmetic in general." [abstract + link to PDF] Computer Science


    "Magic: the Gathering" is as Hard as Arithmetic. "In this paper we show that the ``mate-in-$n$'' problem for Magic is $\Delta^0_n$-hard and that optimal play in two-player Magic is non-arithmetic in general." [abstract + link to PDF]

    Posted: 11 Mar 2020 08:13 PM PDT

    Introducing Interchange: The Innovative Decentralized Bitcoin Exchange Mechanism Powering the First Decentralized Private Marketplace

    Posted: 11 Mar 2020 09:55 PM PDT

    Any good Youtube series on mathematical expression and reasoning for computer science?

    Posted: 11 Mar 2020 08:34 AM PDT

    Hey all, I'm currently in my first year of computer science. Although I'm understanding most concepts without issue, I always feel more confident if I have multiple ways of understanding a certain concept.

    Computer science theory is new to me, so I want to make sure I'm understanding things properly. Currently, we're going over concepts such as number theory, number representation, inductive proofs, and asymptotic runtime complexity for Python code (Big-Oh, delta, theta, lower and upper bounds for worst case, etc.)

    If anyone knows of a great Youtube series (such as 3blue1brown's series on the essence of linear algebra), I'd love to hear it. Thanks.

    submitted by /u/ZacharyVincze
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    Chinese Researchers Use CNNs to Classify 3000-Year-Old Oracle Bone Scripts

    Posted: 11 Mar 2020 03:32 PM PDT

    To better understand the form of Chinese characters used on oracle bones from over 3,000 years ago, a group of Chinese researchers recently applied a multi-regional convolutional neural network (CNN) to classify oracle bone rubbings. Their study has been published by journal IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications.

    Read more: https://medium.com/@Synced/chinese-researchers-use-cnns-to-classify-3000-year-old-oracle-bone-scripts-b3404e3771d7

    submitted by /u/Yuqing7
    [link] [comments]

    Cisco CCNA 200-301

    Posted: 12 Mar 2020 04:29 AM PDT

    Advanced Paundas - List of great pandas functions and snippets (more than a 100) - Colab, Github

    Posted: 12 Mar 2020 12:59 AM PDT

    How Baidu is bringing AI to the fight against coronavirus

    Posted: 11 Mar 2020 05:34 PM PDT

    I'm going to create a free course on Python. Which one of these would you like to have?

    Posted: 12 Mar 2020 03:09 AM PDT

    I will create a free course on one of these topics if I get more than 200 responses. Which one of these would you like to have?

    https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/YBLXZVZ

    submitted by /u/zer0_snot
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    A nice article about self-supervised visual representation learning

    Posted: 11 Mar 2020 07:52 AM PDT

    We're working together to get better at computer science, join us!

    Posted: 11 Mar 2020 06:01 PM PDT

    Surprise, Surprise! Who's online and wants to get better at programming and algorithms?

    There's this awesome app called binarysearch.io where you code with friends and colleagues on challenges and more!

    Join us with this conversation on the slack: https://join.slack.com/t/programmingpals-group/shared_invite/zt-clhqd2ok-90NyBBoJULpuL7iH0louBA

    submitted by /u/aoa2303
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